Demographic Segmentation and Social Media

A recent study of social networks (n=5,000) from Anderson Analytics probes usage and loyalty to the top social networking sites. (Data are US only.) The company estimates roughly 110 million social networks users out of an online population of roughly 190 million, or about 57% penetration of the online population.

Which network is the most valuable:

Facebook — 75%

MySpace — 65%

LinkedIn — 30%

Twitter — 12%

Which network could you “probably do without”:

Twitter — 43%

MySpace — 35%

Facebook — 29%

LinkedIn — 29%

Usage overlap:

These data are ominous news for MySpace in my view. Accordingly, users could abandon MySpace for FB with minimal “switching costs” because lots of people are using both. This is what largely happened to Friendster. As that site stumbled, people switched to MySpace. However MySpace is used by younger audiences than Facebook overall.

Average age of users:

MySpace — 29

Twitter — 33

Facebook — 34

LinkedIn — 36

Gender differences: “By a margin of 55% to 45%, there are more women than men using social networking sites regularly.” LinkedIn apparently skews male, while FB skews female:

As the chart immediately above suggests, there’s limited commercial intent among users. It’s not surprising then that social networks have a mixed track record as ad vehicles (as other data show). Still Anderson found that half of users have “followed a commercial service, product, or brand”:

50% of participants said they have followed a commercial service, product, or brand on a social networking site

46% report saying something positive about a brand on a social networking site